We might not ever see what those cameras picked up, but luckily for all of us, the Foo Fighters made a whole horror movie based on the weirdness. And right around the time we thought we were ridiculous and we were out of our minds, we started to see things on the nest cam that we couldn’t explain," the frontman said. Grohl went on to explain that he even brought a couple of old baby monitor cameras from his home into the house to see if they'd capture anything strange. And we didn’t hear any voices or anything really decipherable. And we’d f***ing zero in on sounds within that. Nobody playing an instrument or anything like that, just an open mic recording a room. There were some tracks that were put on there that we didn’t put on there.
We would open up a Pro Tools session and tracks would be missing. Or the setting we’d put on the board, all of them had gone back to zero.
They seek the help of professional forensic expert Dr Salunkhe and solve various criminal cases. ACP Pradyuman, Daya and Abhijeet are an elite trio of officers who work for the CID. We would come back to the studio the next day and all of the guitars would be detuned. With Shivaji Satam, Aditya Srivastav, Dayanand Shetty, Dinesh Phadnis. “When we walked into the house in Encino, I knew the vibes were definitely off but the sound was f***ing on,” Grohl told Mojo (via NME). “We started working there and it wasn’t long before things started happening. Though the landlord made him sign a non-disclosure agreement on what exactly went down in the house's past (he was trying to sell the place at the time), Grohl did speak to some freaky stuff going on during the recording sessions in an interview last year. And of course, any movie where Dave Grohl is able to just float around the room is worth the price of admission.Īccording to Grohl, the film has roots in some very real experiences the band claims to have had while recording Medicine at Midnight in early 2020, in a rented house built in the 1940s that did, in fact, have some dark history to it. complicated.Īs you can see in the teaser above, the band has absolutely packed Studio 666 with classic horror imagery, from a green glowing pool that reminds us of Ghostbusters, to a Necronomicon-inspired evil book, to all manner of freaky-looking creatures. Something else is in the house besides the band and all their instruments, something much darker rooted in the house's brutal history, and it's about to make the sessions a little.
As the jam sessions get underway and Dave Grohl starts to set up the recording equipment, though, something turns out to be very wrong. The setup for Studio 666 is blissfully, joyfully straightforward: The Foo Fighters rent a house in Encino, California to begin work on a new album. Now, the first teaser for the film is here, and it does not disappoint.
Inspired in part by the feature films made by The Beatles in the 1960s, and by the band's own haunting experiences recording their album Medicine at Midnight, Studio 666 would blend the classic Foo Fighters sound and energy with the horror comedy vibes of films like The Evil Dead. Early last month, the Foo Fighters announced via social media that they'd done something rather surprising: They made a whole horror movie in which they play themselves.